THE NEW YORKER 59 though, and he was left with nothing but a lot of publicity and the fifty thou- sand dollars Some baseball fan con- sidered this a more than reasonable bonus for his contribution to the national pastime that season, inasmuch as he hadn't even watched Brooklyn play, whereas Peewee Reese and Jackie ;' Robinson were each getting considerably less for a ful1 season's strenuous effort. Zeckendorf does not feel that he was overpaid. "Personally, I thought the sum inadequate," he told a friend during * a hot-stove-Ieague session last winter. "After all, fifty thousand dollars repre- sented only a five-per-cent return on my prospective investment. It wasn't a J" question of how much or how little effort on my part was involved. It was that I had committed myself to tie up a million dollars' worth of venture capital that I could h 1. ve had working for me ,, , elsewhere. Looking back on the episode, I think I made a stupid deal. Only my .. ,. enthusiasm for the glamour of the game prompted me to make a deal on such ' disadvantageous terms." -, . t Æ. ? " ":, . F: this sensational cosmetlc acts like a ''face lift" \ .: : 1) . ., ";W Z ECKENDORF'S new private office, which he expects to move into around Christlnas, is a windowless, cylindrical room, with a diameter of twenty-six feet-or just about half the distance from the pitcher's mound to home plate-on the top of Webb & Knapp's Madison A venue headquarters. ' His only outside view is of the sky, which he can glimpse by gazing through a handful of plastic skylights let into the ceiling of his cylinder . Walter Lipp- mann once had a similar room, to permit undistracted meditation. Pei, who de- signed Zeckendorf's sanctum when Webb & Knapp recently decided to treat \Vebb & Knapp to a three-hun- dred - and - twen ty- fi ve - thousand - dollar redecorating job, has eXplained that he resolved to .shield his boss from lateral vistas after analyzing his character. "I came to the conclusion that he is a show- ..1. ,.' 7,::. , ::" '", " , :' '" , <' JI!I INVISIBLE BEAUTY STRAP "' ." , "":i:, "'" . "",J .: ,." ) ,.. < " :; '\ .., h .f #. ' . * You can actually see and feel this ne,," flo,,"ing cream making you more beautiful. It is almost unbelievable to see ho,," quickly it pares off your age-yet it takes only seconds to massage onto your skin. Gives the face a firming, lifting, bracing feeling and tends to tighten flabby skin and smooth away ,,"rinkles . . . brings a wonderful glo,," to the com- plexion. Wonder of wonders! Jawline puffiness, mouth-to-nose lines" and that tired look seem to dIsappear. Quickly this ne,," beauty liquid vanishes on to thp skin. Y ou will discover that you are more beautiful, truly glamorous-because your skin looks firm, lifted, tight before you apply founda- / tion and make-up. This glorious new f AN'iS O:e.NN Y' beauty lasts hours and hours. $5* " ., ,, ") ' ': : r, : \,,, , N' .t "::. ", ' t"f ,/ .< .': 1> . '. 'INVISIBLE BEA'CTY STRAP I ./. :, f 1 \1 \ ". .. - -' V \ 1.,'\\ \ 4 · .1 , : , ',' . y' *"" 'o": "'.. , . :.," S NOW B LOS S 0 M . . . the name to remember (' An imaginative new perfume that draws its fragrance from many faraway lands . . . a blend of flower oils which gives Snow Blossom a softness, a roundness, a long-lasting quality. 'G1 Perfume, $17.50* Toilet Essence, $5.00* *1Jlus tax At selected cosmetic departments or FRANCES DENNEY., Philadelphia